I have a neighbor who only uses the touchscreen on their ThinkPad, except when they have to type something.
The other day I stopped by to help them troubleshoot a problem, and they had to do a password reset.
They touched the Old Password field on the screen and typed in their old password on the keyboard. They touched New Password on the screen and typed in the new one. Of course then they had to touch the second New Password field on the screen and enter it again on the keyboard. Finally they reached up to touch the OK button on the screen.
I mentioned that they could avoid going back and forth between screen and keyboard by using the Tab and Enter keys. They asked, "What are those?" I pointed them out on the keyboard and explained what they do.
We will see if the message got through. Hopefully with some gentle encouragement over time, it will.
My real point is that yes, some people do use touchscreen laptops.
My wife was a devotee of the touch screens on her Windows laptops (she had an HP and a Surface), although now she seems to use her iPad (with smart keyboard) exclusively except with rare sessions at her desk to use the laptop.
She always tends to tap the screen when she uses one of my Macs. It was fascinating during the early days of the pandemic seeing my kids (who were in kindergarten at the time) adapt more easily to trackpad+keyboard on the Mac vs touchscreen on iPad than she did.
I remember being at a college computer lab and watching someone trying to use the mouse on the Mac while holding it suspended in air. It made Scotty's mouse moment in Star Trek IV completely understandable.
I have a neighbor who only uses the touchscreen on their ThinkPad, except when they have to type something.
The other day I stopped by to help them troubleshoot a problem, and they had to do a password reset.
They touched the Old Password field on the screen and typed in their old password on the keyboard. They touched New Password on the screen and typed in the new one. Of course then they had to touch the second New Password field on the screen and enter it again on the keyboard. Finally they reached up to touch the OK button on the screen.
I mentioned that they could avoid going back and forth between screen and keyboard by using the Tab and Enter keys. They asked, "What are those?" I pointed them out on the keyboard and explained what they do.
We will see if the message got through. Hopefully with some gentle encouragement over time, it will.
My real point is that yes, some people do use touchscreen laptops.